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Query: UMLS:C0034063 (
pulmonary edema
)
10,665
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The increased survival rate of malignant diseases due to more aggressive treatments contributes to the occurrence of drug-induced pulmonary diseases (DIPD). We reviewed, retrospectively over a 10-year period, 15 children (8 girls) who presented a DIPD. Their mean age was 9 years (range, 1 to 17 years), with an underlying malignant disease in 14 (9 leukemias). Three typical patterns have emerged from this analysis: (1) acute hypersensitivity
lung disease
caused by methotrexate (in 6 patients) or azathioprine (in 1 patient). This acute syndrome consisted of alveolar-interstitial infiltrate with a hypercellularity on bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) (mean, 714,286 cells/mL; range, 180,000-2,940,000 cells/mL) and an increase of lymphocyte counts (mean, 39%; range 11-64%) with predominantly CD8-suppressor/cytotoxic lymphocytes. Inhibition of leukocyte migration or leukocyte aggregation in the presence of low drug concentrations was positive in the 5 cases tested. Lung function tests showed a restrictive pattern and the outcome of DIPD was always favorable. (2) Chronic pneumonitis/fibrosis was seen in 6 patients who received a variable association of cyclophosphamide (3 patients), bleomycin (2 patients), BCNU (2 patients), and melphalan (1 patient). Symptoms of an alveolar-interstitial pneumonitis developed progressively. BAL showed a moderate increase of total cell numbers (mean, 495,000 cells/mL; range, 150,000-900,000 cells/mL). Lung function tests showed a restrictive pattern. Despite corticosteroid treatment in 4 children, one died after bleomycin lung injury and 2 had functional lung impairment. (3) Noncardiogenic
pulmonary edema
occurred in 2 patients with leukemia treated with recombinant interleukin II. BAL showed hypercellularity and outcome was rapidly favorable.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Cytotoxic drug-induced pulmonary disease in infants and children. 789 68
High-resolution computed tomography (HRCT) is a proved imaging modality for use in assessment of infiltrative
lung disease
. Findings suggestive of infiltrative
lung disease
on HRCT scans include ground-glass attenuation, consolidation, nodules, and interlobular septal thickening. Similar patterns, however, may be caused by various vascular abnormalities including regional or diffuse increase in blood flow,
pulmonary edema
, pulmonary hypertension, and thromboembolism. A correct diagnosis can usually be made by careful analysis of the pulmonary vasculature. Parenchymal abnormalities of vascular origin are associated with increased or decreased vessel diameter, vascular compression, or intraluminal filling defect.
...
PMID:Pulmonary parenchymal abnormalities of vascular origin: high-resolution CT findings. 793 65
On the basis of the data available in the literature and of our experience, the clinical patterns of respiratory troubles which can be observed in workers exposed to inhalation of hard metal dusts can be schematized as follows: Irritation forms, mild and transient, or severe up to
pulmonary oedema
, dose-correlated, which occur in all subjects exposed to sufficiently high atmospheric concentrations; Asthmatic forms, either reversible after cessation of exposure or persistent after stopping the exposure, which occur in a relatively low percentage of exposed subjects and also apply to the states quoted below; Dyspnoic patterns due to alveolitis (lymphocytic alveolitis with inverted helper/suppressor ratio, or giant cell-eosinophilic alveolitis, with or without fibrotic changes of pulmonary interstitium); Interstitial sclerotic
lung disease
, associated with or without an alveolitic component. The present diagnostic potentialities, particularly bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL), have helped in defining the clinical patterns and have confirmed the fundamental role of individual susceptibility in the occurrence of clinical manifestations (with the exception of the irritation forms), but so far have not yet enabled us to clarify whether the different clinical patterns are the results of a single pathogenetic mechanism or constitute pathogenetically distinct entities.
...
PMID:Hard metal disease: clinical aspects. 793 10
Widespread vaccination has largely eliminated anthrax in Europe (the last case was reported in France in 1972) but the disease remains endemic in many developing countries. The usual cutaneous presentation (malignant pustules) is much more familiar than the various visceral manifestations including digestive tract, pulmonary or meningeal signs. We report a case of a 33-year-old immigrant living in France who was hospitalized for asthenia, dyspnoea, mucopurulant expectoration and moderate diarrhoea 3 days after a 3-month stay in Senegal and Gambia. The temperature was 39 degrees C at admission and blood pressure 110/70 mmHg. Crepitants were heard at the base of the right lung and the rest of the physical examination was normal. Blood was drawn for culture. Laboratory tests and the chest X-ray led to the diagnosis of
pneumopathy
and a treatment of amoxicillin and clavulanic acid was given with oxygenotherapy. The patient's temperature returned to normal but over the next 48 hours the dyspnoea worsened together with the black diarrhoea. The abdomen was painful. There were no skin lesions. The chest X-ray revealed an extension of the bilateral pulmonary images and bilateral pleural effusion. Laboratory tests revealed thrombopenia (platelet count 38,000/mm3) hyperleukocytosis (WBC 48,000/mm3) and haemolysis (Hb 4 milligrams). The diagnosis was made on the basis of the initial blood cultures which were positive for Bacillus anthracis. All other samples were negative, including HIV serology. Despite adapted antibiotic therapy (penicillin G, 8MU/day, was initiated on day 2), multiple organ failure occurred with septic shock and
pulmonary oedema
. The patient died in the intensive care unit on day 7. Fatal outcome due to anthrax is described in 25% of the visceral forms but reaches 100% in cases of septicaemia. The haemolysis observed in this case is not mentioned in the classical descriptions of anthrax. When treating septic syndromes in patients who have returned from endemic zones, clinicians should entertain the diagnosis of anthrax since the risk of fatal outcome is increased greatly in case of delayed diagnosis.
...
PMID:[Visceral form of human anthrax imported from Africa]. 802 24
A number of studies have shown that high-resolution CT (HRCT) scanning may be helpful in the assessment of acute diffuse
lung disease
in immunocompromised patients. HRCT may demonstrate abnormalities when the radiograph is normal and may allow for a more confident diagnosis in patients with nonspecific radiographic findings. Because HRCT is superior in demonstrating the distribution and extent of parenchymal abnormalities, it is also helpful as a guide to the optimal type and site of lung biopsy. This article reviews the HRCT manifestations of the most common causes of acute diffuse
lung disease
in the immunocompromised host, including infection, drug-induced
lung disease
,
pulmonary edema
, and neoplasms.
...
PMID:High-resolution computed tomography in acute diffuse lung disease in the immunocompromised patient. 802 77
Unilateral
pulmonary edema
is a distinctly unusual clinical entity, often misdiagnosed initially as one of the more common causes of focal
lung disease
. Predominantly lobar
pulmonary edema
is rarer still. We report a case of right upper lobe
pulmonary edema
caused by the acute onset of severe mitral regurgitation. In addition, we briefly review the other causes of unilateral
pulmonary edema
, focusing on the cases that have been reported in association with heart failure and valvular heart disease. The majority of cases of right upper lobe
pulmonary edema
have been associated with mitral regurgitation. In addition to confirming the presence of mitral regurgitation, transesophageal echocardiography proved useful in delineating the mechanism for edema formation. It detected differential gradients between the right and left pulmonary venous systems and documented the direction of the regurgitant flow.
...
PMID:Right upper lobe pulmonary edema caused by acute mitral regurgitation. Diagnosis by transesophageal echocardiography. 813 90
Drug-induced disease of any system or organ can be associated with high morbidity and mortality, and it is tremendously costly to the health care of our country. More than 100 medications are known to affect the lungs adversely, including the airways in the form of cough and asthma, the interstitium with interstitial pneumonitis and noncardiac
pulmonary edema
, and the pleura with pleural effusions. Patients commonly do not even know what medications they are taking, do not bring them to the physician's office for identification, and usually do not relate over-the-counter medications with any problems they have. They assume that all nonprescription drugs are safe. Patients also believe that if they are taking prescription medications at their discretion, meaning on an as-needed basis, then these medications are also not important. This situation stresses just how imperative it is for the physician to take an accurate drug history in all patients seen with unexplained medical situations. Cardiovascular drugs that most commonly produce a pulmonary abnormality are amiodarone, the angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors, and beta-blockers. Pulmonary complications will develop in 6% of patients taking amiodarone and 15% taking angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors, with the former associated with interstitial pneumonitis that can be fatal and the latter associated with an irritating cough that is not associated with any pathologic or physiologic sequelae of consequence. The beta-blockers can aggravate obstructive
lung disease
in any patient taking them. Of the antiinflammatory agents, acetylsalicyclic acid can produce several different airway and parenchymal complications, including aggrevation of asthma in up to 5% of patients with asthma, a noncardiac
pulmonary edema
when levels exceed 40 mg/dl, and a pseudosepsis syndrome. More than 200 products contain aspirin. Low-dose methotrexate is proving to be a problem because granulomatous interstitial pneumonitis develops in 5% of those patients receiving it. This condition occurs most often in patients receiving the drug for rheumatoid arthritis, but it has been reported in a few patients receiving it for refractory asthma. Chemotherapeutic drug-induced
lung disease
is almost always associated with fever, thus mimicking opportunistic infection, which is the most common cause of pulmonary complications in the immunocompromised host. However, in 10% to 15% of patients, the pulmonary infiltrate is due to an adverse effect from a chemotherapeutic agent. This complication is frequently fatal even when recognized early.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Drug-induced pulmonary disease. 817 59
Neonatal respiratory distress syndrome (RDS) is an acute lung injury believed to result primarily from surfactant deficiency in the immature lung. Although surfactant replacement therapy has improved the outcome of this disease, RDS remains a major cause of neonatal mortality and morbidity. Preliminary experimental evidence suggests that unopposed intravascular thrombin activity may contribute to the progression of RDS by promoting high permeability
pulmonary oedema
and pulmonary hypertension. In the extravascular lung compartment, polymerizing fibrin may inhibit surfactant function. In addition, interstitial and alveolar thrombin formation and resulting fibrin deposition may contribute to the development of chronic
lung disease
through amplification of inflammation and fibrosis. There is good evidence that extravascular coagulation occurs during the course of RDS. Fibrin is a major component of the hyaline membranes, which are a hallmark of acute lung injury, and which can be regarded as locally produced clots. It has been less certain whether neonatal RDS is also associated with intravascular activation of the coagulation system. Although low levels of antithrombin III (AT III) have been reported in infants with RDS, direct evidence of increased intravascular thrombin formation has been lacking. However, recently, plasma concentrations of thrombin-antithrombin III (TAT) complexes have been measured in infants with RDS and correlated with RDS severity. TAT formation was significantly increased in severe neonatal RDS, while free AT III activity was decreased. These data are consistent with increased thrombin generation and resulting AT III consumption. Therefore, to regulate thrombin activity, infants with severe RDS may benefit from replacement therapy with AT III concentrate. This hypothesis has been strengthened by experiments that have demonstrated the efficacy of thrombin inhibition in several animal models of acute lung injury. However, controlled clinical trials will be required to determine whether thrombin is just a coincidental marker of neonatal RDS, or whether unopposed thrombin activity exacerbates the disease process.
...
PMID:Antithrombin III deficiency in neonatal respiratory distress syndrome. 818 52
Ninety-four consecutive patients (60 men and 34 women; mean age 68.5 +/- 11.5 years) with acute myocardial infarction (MI) were investigated retrospectively, in order to evaluate the prevalence, clinical features, and short-term course of the atypical forms (symptoms other than chest pain). An atypical MI was found in 30 patients, with a prevalence of 32% (95% confidence limits 27-36%). It was most prevalent in women above sixty-five years old (P < 0.05). Abdominal pain, paroxysmal dyspnea, and
pulmonary edema
were the most frequent symptoms (33%, 17%, 13%, respectively). No differences were observed between typical and atypical MI in regard to risk factors (hypercholesterolemia, arterial hypertension, diabetes mellitus, cigarette smoking) and history of MI, cerebrovascular disease, peripheral vascular disease, or chronic
lung disease
. Significantly fewer patients with atypical MI had a history of angina pectoris (P < 0.05). No differences were observed in regard to previous medication, except for antiarrhythmic drugs, more often used by atypical patients (P < 0.05). Location and severity of MI (as judged by ECG and peak levels of creatine kinase in the serum) were similar in both subgroups, as were the complications (34% typical and 50% atypical) and death rate (12.5% and 16.7%, respectively). In conclusion, atypical MI is not less severe than typical. This emphasizes the need for a high suspicion index in many different clinical settings, but particularly (although not exclusively) in elderly females, in the presence of abdominal pain or otherwise unexplained paroxysmal dyspnea.
...
PMID:Prevalence, clinical features, and acute course of atypical myocardial infarction. 828 84
Toxic oil syndrome is a multisystemic, epidemic disease that appeared in Spain in 1981, related to the intake of rapeseed cooking oil sold in bulk. It affected 19,748 people, of whom 457 died. The toxic substance was never identified. We report the 8-year follow-up of a cohort of 332 patients. The disease was usually severe and disabling during the first 2 years, but the clinical condition of most of the patients improved thereafter. The acute phase lasted 2 months, and was characterized by
pulmonary edema
, rash, eosinophilia, and myalgia. During the intermediate phase (second to fourth months), severe myalgia, skin tenderness, subcutaneous edema, altered liver function, and pulmonary hypertension developed. Later on, an early chronic phase developed, from the fourth month to the end of the second year. It was marked by scleroderma, sicca syndrome, polyneuropathy, joint contractures, weight loss, and functional limitations. The clinical manifestations improved during the late chronic phase. Its most prominent clinical features were muscle cramps, chronic musculoskeletal pain, chronic
lung disease
, Raynaud phenomenon, carpal tunnel syndrome, and psychologic disturbances. Only 9% of the patients achieved remission after the acute phase, the rest developing late clinical manifestations of the disease. The severity of the chronic manifestations was rather variable. At the end of the 8-year follow-up, there were 10 TOS-related deaths (3%), 47% of the patients had some kind of complaint, albeit subtle in most cases, and 16% showed organic involvement related to TOS. The most important pathologic features of TOS were widespread interstitial infiltrates, non-necrotizing angiitis, endothelial proliferation, and tissue fibrosis. Toxic oil syndrome is a dramatic example of an induced scleroderma-like syndrome, similar to the eosinophilia-myalgia syndrome. Patients with EMS may develop some of the late clinical features of TOS in the years to come.
...
PMID:Toxic oil syndrome. A long-term follow-up of a cohort of 332 patients. 841 42
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